iHerp Australia Issue 5 | Page 7

nothing like them. I hadn’t realized that all along, through all those years of breeding pythons, I had been selecting for what I deemed to be the best-looking snakes – nature no longer had a say in it! It was from that moment that I started to investigate the other side of the hobby; the ‘dark side’ had me in its grip! It became clear to me that I was also turning away from the world of genetics, not just because I thought I was a purist, but because I didn’t understand it. I decided to take the plunge and went and purchased my first albino Darwin Carpet Python (Morelia spilota variegata) at a time when they still cost an arm and a leg and a left testicle! Once I had that animal in my collection it didn't take me long to get my head around how the recessive mode of inheritance worked, and it all snowballed from there. Morphs are not going anywhere and will always be a permanent part of the hobby, but you still hear the purists condemn them with cries of, “It’s not natural," "It’s a threat to our native populations," "I wouldn't breed anything that didn't come from the wild," etc. The reality is that there is nothing natural about what we do in the reptile hobby. We keep reptiles in boxes, heat them with electricity, use artificial lights and feed them prepackaged food. Humans have been modifying captive animals for literally thousands of years, so why the outrage when we do it with reptiles? You don't see people walking wolves down the street. Furthermore, humans, cats, dogs and foxes, to name a few, pose far bigger threats to our native species than the occasional, escaped, brightly-coloured snake that will stand out so vividly in the natural environment that it will stand little chance of survival, even if climatic conditions are favourable. With the advent of these brightly-coloured animals entering the hobby we have seen an explosion in the popularity of keeping reptiles as pets, and that in itself can only be a good thing. There’s no doubt that many